A complete organized library of all my videos, digital slides, pics, & sample pathology reports is available here: kikoxp.com/posts/5084 (dermpath) & kikoxp.com/posts/5083 (bone/soft tissue sarcoma pathology).
Hello Dr. Jerad, I'm a 2nd year Path resident in India. I find it difficult to distinguish between normal ovarian stroma and spindle cell lesion when no history is given with the slide. How do I differentiate between the two? Has anyone else faced this problem or am I alone? 😅
You are not alone! When I was a resident, just seeing ovary for the first time, I thought it was a synovial sarcoma at first glance! For some reason I had learned about synovial sarcoma before I had seen many ovary cases. so if anyone gives you difficulty about mistaking ovary and spindle cell tumor, you can tell them that Jerad Gardner had a problem with it too! 😎 some tips: If you see follicles or corpora lutea or mesothelium/epithelium on the outer surface, those will help you to recognize ovary rather than a tumor. Always pay attention to every structure on the whole Slide don’t just focus on the first thing you see. Seeing all of the tiny details can help give us clues to figure out where we are in the body and what the situation is. It’s true that many times we don’t really need this because we are giving history. But sometimes we are not given history, or we are given an accurate history, or there is a swap in specimens or something like that and those little clues can be a lifesaver. Become a master of normal histology for all parts of the body. That is the foundation of becoming an excellent pathologist.
A complete organized library of all my videos, digital slides, pics, & sample pathology reports is available here: kikoxp.com/posts/5084 (dermpath) & kikoxp.com/posts/5083 (bone/soft tissue sarcoma pathology).
My best teacher is you
Thank you Dr. Gardner
Thank you very much for investing your time in making all of the videos. All of them are clear, to the point and entertaining.
This is very interesting. Thank You for taking the time to create and share this wonderfully informational and helpful video with us all ❤️
Great video, clear explanations (including some molecular) and really good image quality. Thank you!
Thank you sir for subtitles
Thank you Dr Gardner, I like all of your videos, I am a pathology resident From Peru.
Hello Jerad. Cambio is Latin for change, modification, etc.
Really loved this. Thanks so much. Excellent casesand great explanation. Really helpful when you don't see too much soft tissue day to day.
Very well explained. Thank you!
Very useful. Thank you.
Please let me know if I misspelled the tumor's names:
1.Alveolar Soft Part Sarcoma 0:00
2.Alveolar Rhabdomyosarcoma 7:31
3.Perineurioma 13:28
4.Pleomorphic Lipoma 20:32
5.Botryoid-type Embryonal Rhabdomyosarcoma 29:55
6.Cellular Neurothekeoma 35:32
7.Chondroid Lipoma 41:48
8.Epithelioid Hemangioendothelioma (EHE) 46:23
9.Nerve Sheath Myxoma 56:07
10.Malignant Triton Tumor (MPNST) 1:00:03
Fantastic!!! Thank you!!!
@@JMGardnerMD Please keep doing videos, you always have my support!
Thank you so much....
great explanation sir
Please show the diagnosis of the slides in written format also
I’ll add this as soon as I get a chance
👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾You are the best
Great chrismas present!
It is like Ewing sarcoma I did not till now know the diagnosis
Very good
Hello Dr. Jerad, I'm a 2nd year Path resident in India. I find it difficult to distinguish between normal ovarian stroma and spindle cell lesion when no history is given with the slide. How do I differentiate between the two? Has anyone else faced this problem or am I alone? 😅
You are not alone! When I was a resident, just seeing ovary for the first time, I thought it was a synovial sarcoma at first glance! For some reason I had learned about synovial sarcoma before I had seen many ovary cases. so if anyone gives you difficulty about mistaking ovary and spindle cell tumor, you can tell them that Jerad Gardner had a problem with it too! 😎 some tips: If you see follicles or corpora lutea or mesothelium/epithelium on the outer surface, those will help you to recognize ovary rather than a tumor. Always pay attention to every structure on the whole Slide don’t just focus on the first thing you see. Seeing all of the tiny details can help give us clues to figure out where we are in the body and what the situation is. It’s true that many times we don’t really need this because we are giving history. But sometimes we are not given history, or we are given an accurate history, or there is a swap in specimens or something like that and those little clues can be a lifesaver. Become a master of normal histology for all parts of the body. That is the foundation of becoming an excellent pathologist.
Dr. Gardner is to pathology residents as Dr. Sattar is to medical students
Give examples of soft tissues in body?
Fat, nerve, smooth and skeletal muscle, tendon, ligament, fascia, blood vessels.